System and method for light fluorescence detection
A device for determining the presence or absence of at least one substance is described. The device includes an illumination component including at least one light emitting diode in the forward bias mode acting as an emitter and configured to illuminate a target with a first waveband; and a detection component including at least one light emitting diode in the reverse bias mode acting as a detector and configured to detect a second waveband emitted by the target in response to the first waveband if the target contains a threshold amount of the at least one substance, wherein, the illumination component and the detection component are included in a single head unit module.
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1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is directed generally to light induced fluorescence techniques for the detection of substances. More particularly, the invention is directed to a handheld, non-contact illumination and detection device for identifying the presence or absence of specific substances including explosives, illegal drugs, chemical/biological agents, and toxic industrial chemicals.
2. Description of the Related Art
As described in the Guide for the Selection of Drug Detectors for Law Enforcement Applications, NIJ Guide 601-00, by Parmeter et al., Contraband Detection Technologies Department Sandia National Laboratories (1999) which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, trace detection is a common approach to the detection of narcotics, and refers to detecting the drug by collection and analysis of microscopic amounts of the drug. These microscopic quantities can be in the form of vapor, particulate, or both.
There are two primary methods of collecting trace material for delivery to a trace chemical detector: vacuuming and swiping. Vacuuming is used to collect vapor and/or airborne particulate and is usually performed with a hand-held device similar to a Dustbuster. Air is pulled through a filter pad within this device, collecting vapor or particles of illicit drugs that are present in the air. The pad is then removed and presented to a sampling port on the trace detector for analysis. A few trace detectors are designed so that air can be sucked directly into an inlet port on the detector.
Swipe collection, which is intended to collect particulate residue deposited on surfaces uses sampling pads that are wiped (“swiped”) across a surface to be analyzed. These pads are usually supplied by the manufacturer of the detector used and can be applied to any surface, including clothing and skin. Once a swipe sample has been obtained, the pad is presented to a sampling port on the detector, usually in the same way as that of a vacuum sampling pad. Swiping is often more sensitive than vacuuming because it allows more particulate matter to be collected, and with low vapor pressure materials even one microscopic particle may contain a larger mass of material than would be present in a large volume of air saturated with vapor. However, swiping may sometimes be considered too invasive for purposes of personnel screening because it requires direct contact of the sampling pad with skin or clothing.
Additionally, trained canines are also used as initial trace detectors because they detect drugs from residual vapor and particle contamination.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONSummary of the Problem
As described above, techniques exist for illegal drug detection through forensic and toxicological analysis of urine, blood, hair, and sweat (extracted from clothing). These trace detection techniques require sample collection from suspected abusers and laboratory processing where substances are isolated and subsequent analysis is carried out by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS), high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), radioimmunoassay (RIA), enzyme immunoassay (EIA) or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELIA). These techniques and devices require contact with the trace, i.e., obtaining a field sample which is intrusive, and may require multiple steps before a positive (or negative) determination is made, thereby lengthening considerably the time needed to confirm the presence of a particular substance. The need for actual contact increases the chances for cross-contamination, and may require some level of detector system cleansing between sample analysis. Additionally, these systems and methods are expensive and require specialized optical systems and high maintenance precision spectrometers that require time-consuming calibration steps in order to perform the required spectral analysis.
Need
Accordingly, there is a need in the art for a simple, rugged, hand-held, non-contact system which provides for the near real-time indication of the presence of a target substance.
Summary of the Solution
Throughout this disclosure, we use the term waveband to denote an illumination signal or a detected response signal that may vary in amplitude across a range of wavelengths. A typical light emitting diode (LED) emits light in a waveband centered at a particular wavelength, with the distribution about that central wavelength defined in terms of the full-width of the distribution at half the amplitude of the emitted light. Those familiar with the art refer to this as the full-width at half-max (FWHM), and for most LEDs, this width is typically 25 nanometers. LEDs operating in the detection mode exhibit this characteristic as well in their response function. LED illumination and detection characteristics including FWHM may vary depending on, e.g., manufacturing process and/or technical advance.
In accordance with a first preferred embodiment of the present invention, a device for determining the presence or absence of at least one substance is described. The device includes an illumination component configured to illuminate a target with a first waveband, and a detection component including at least one light emitting diode configured to detect a second waveband emitted by the target in response to the first waveband if the target contains a threshold amount of at least one substance, wherein the illumination component and the detection component are included in a single head unit module.
In accordance with a second preferred embodiment of the present invention, a device for determining the presence or absence of at least one substance is described. The device includes an illumination component including at least one forward bias light emitting diode configured to illuminate a target with a first waveband; and a detection component including at least one reveres-bias light emitting diode configured to detect a second waveband emitted by the target in response to the first waveband if the target contains a threshold amount of the at least one substance.
In accordance with a third preferred embodiment of the present invention, a method for determining the presence or absence of at least one substance is described. The method includes illuminating a target with a first waveband to induce a fluorescence emission from the at least one substance; and detecting the fluorescence emission using at least one light emitting diode configured to detect the fluorescence emission emitted by the target in response to the first waveband if the target contains a threshold amount of the at least one substance.
The figures summarized below are intended to be read in combination with the detailed descriptions set forth herein and are exemplary. One skilled in the art recognizes variations to these exemplary figures which clearly fall within the scope of the invention.
The following detailed embodiments are intended to be exemplary and not exhaustive. Those skilled in the art recognize alternative embodiments that fall within the scope of the invention exemplified herein.
In a preferred embodiment of the present invention, a system and method for the detection of trace amounts of methamphetamine, also known as meth, crystal meth, crank, and ice among other street names, is described. The system and method implement light induced fluorescence and fluorescence detection with a system of light emitting diodes.
As an initial step in carrying out the method for detection of meth, it is necessary to determine the fluorescence characteristics for meth. Contrary to the published literature and expected results, meth fluorescence was detected when illuminated at the following wavebands: 233 nanometers (nm) to 259 nm centered at 245 (nm) (
Further to the preferred embodiment,
Referring to data module 30, the data module is a data collection and output interface that receives, records/stores, and transmits/downloads data detected by the head unit module 25a. In operation, when a substance of interest is detected a scan/record mode is either automatically or manually selected directing the data module 30 to record the scan or multiple scans into a flash memory. Additional data such as head unit identification and configuration (e.g., illumination waveband, detection waveband), and signal strength, may also be collected and recorded using subcomponents either within the data module 30 or other modules of the modular detection device 20. The recorded scan information could then be retrieved by/downloaded into a computer at a later time and the detector device memory then cleared and reset for the next use with the same head unit module 25a or different head unit module tuned to detect other substances. In a preferred embodiment, the information stored in data module 30 is accessible via an I/O port, e.g., USB port 48, or may be transmitted wirelessly via, e.g., infrared (“IR”) or radio frequency (“RF”) transmission, to a wireless receiver.
Data from the data module can be combined in a computer file with data from other data devices such as geographic (e.g., Global Positioning System Coordinates “GPS”) coordinates of the scan, photographic images of scanned surfaces and individuals, and time stamp information recording the time the scan and images were collected for later use, e.g., as potential court evidence. The modular detection device 20 may also include a camera in the head unit module 25a to record pictures, and GPS components and clock in the control module 35. The camera images and geo-location and time data would also be stored in the device's flash memory for later retrieval.
Referring to controller module 35, the controller module includes electro-mechanical subcomponents and related circuitry for supporting the operation of the modular detection device 20 including, power on/off switch 46 which may be a slider switch, push button, or other trigger, mode switches (see
The modularity of the design is an inherent feature of this technology approach. It applies to any embodiment of this technology and offers several unique features. The head unit module can be readily adapted or replaced if LED technology changes, or interchanged with other head unit modules if other substances must be detected. The controller module readily supports advanced embodiments that may require sequential or variable illuminations with concomitantly changed detection requirements for detection of new substances and/or detection in highly cluttered backgrounds. It could also be modified to provide information to the operator regarding device performance and response if such requirements may arise as a result of changes in legislation or the rules of evidence. The data module can readily accommodate the wide variety of data interfaces currently in use, and can be modified to accommodate any new interfaces that may arise as computer and other technologies advance. Finally, the power module readily accommodates the wide variety of power options available today, and can also be adapted to new power source technologies.
In an alternative embodiment, referring to
In still a further alternative embodiment,
The embodiments described herein contemplate various configurations of the emitting and detecting LEDs both alone and in relation to one another. For example, the sizes of the LEDs may not be uniform, e.g., the emitting LEDs may be smaller than the detection LEDs in order fit the requisite number of LEDs into the head unit module 25a or 25b or 25c. Further, the ratio of emitting LEDs to detection LEDs is not necessarily 1:1, but instead the ratio is tailored to minimize necessary power levels and maximize detection at the desired distance, e.g. approximately 4-24 inches, between the face 27 and the target 5. The ranges and exact values of the ratios, M/N, of emitting LEDs (M) to detection LEDs (N) will be determined by a combination of factors involving the specifics of the illuminating and detecting wavebands, the quantum efficiencies of the associated fluorescence phenomena, the subsequent responses of various substances to the illumination, and the nature of the various types of relevant interferent substances and clutter.
For example, as shown in the head unit module embodiments 25d and 25e of
Additionally, LED illumination and detection characteristics may vary depending on manufacturing process and/or technical advance. This may result the need to vary the number of illuminators and detectors for each embodiment discussed within the document.
Similarly, the number N of detector LEDs required for detection may vary as well. For example, some substances may respond to a particular illumination waveband with a narrow-band peak at a specific characteristic wavelength that is either well-removed in wavelength from competing clutter, or has sufficient response amplitude to clearly stand well out of the clutter at nearby wavebands, i.e., exhibits a large signal-to-noise ratio. On the other hand, other substances may not have such readily detectable responses. In such cases, an embodiment using multiple LEDs at different wavebands may be needed to detect either broader or lower amplitude spectral responses with the ratios of those responses at different detection wavebands providing the basis for detection (as is the case in the initial embodiment for methamphetamine that uses three detectors to cover the response waveband). Alternatively, a substance may exhibit a series of specific, lower amplitude peaks that permit detection of the substance even in the presence of clutter. Finally, in some more advanced embodiments, it may be necessary to have both multiple illuminators and multiple detectors, as well as a stepped sequence of illumination and detection to verify the presence of the substance of interest. Those familiar with the art would recognize such configurations as being representative of a substantially advanced embodiment of the technology.
Calibration
In still a further embodiment of the present invention, a calibration subcomponent (not shown) is integrated into the charging station or built as a separate calibration module. The calibration subcomponent would be used to verify and validate modular detection device 20 operation and performance, and calibrate each tuned head module 25a or tuned subset of LEDs, e.g., subsets 62, 64, 66 and 68 of
Operation
In a primary mode of operation, the user either secures the desired tuned head unit module 25a or selects the desired combination of LEDs on the single head module 25b or 25c with selector switch 60 or proper rotation 79, and directs the face 27 of the modular detection device 20 towards a target 5 which is being inspected for a particular substance. Targets may include clothing, body parts, trunk lids, door handles, steering wheels and interior or exterior surfaces on automobiles, and other surfaces (such as door knobs, furniture and appliance surfaces, walls, floors, ceilings, etc.) that may contain traces of a suspected substance. Referring to
The exemplary devices and methods described herein are capable of detecting trace amounts of the targeted substance. While what constitutes a trace amount varies depending on the substance, in general, it is expected the embodiments described herein will detect amounts down to levels at or below micrograms per square centimeter. The current art and methods used to detect various substances generally do not report their sensitivities in terms of contamination per unit area. Rather, those sensitivities are specified in terms of the absolute mass that can be detected by those methods, reported as, for example, the minimum mass required for detection on a specially prepared and packaged swab dragged across a surface, which swab is then analyzed by mass spectroscopy, gas chromatography, or other analytic methods in a laboratory or special test kit. (Guide for the Selection of Drug Detectors for Law Enforcement Applications, NIJ Guide 601-00, 1999.) Information obtained from law enforcement authorities reveals that expected levels of methamphetamine or other contaminations may be as high as milligrams per square centimeter.
The device is not limited to the tuned wavebands and substances exemplified above. The device may be used for detection of any substance with an excitable and identifiable fluorescence signature, e.g., explosives residue, hazardous chemicals such as the persistent chemical agents VX or mustard, toxic industrial chemicals such as PCBs, biological materials such as the infectious agent, anthrax, or biological poisons such as ricin. Other modular device head unit embodiments would be tuned to each different substance desired for detection.
The key features of this technology that lend themselves to these broadly scoped advanced embodiments are the monochromatic nature of the light produced by LEDs (typically, a full width at half max of 25 nanometers), the comparable narrow receptor bandwidth when operated as a detector, short response times of the LEDs in either the illumination or detection modes, the small size and weight, and the ruggedness of the LEDs themselves, the low power requirements, and the fact that the embodiment of this technology does not require the use of sensitive, precisely aligned mechanical optical paths and components. The advanced embodiment would use illuminating LEDs selected to produce specific fluorescent responses from a particular substance of interest as well as from the confounding substances likely to be present with the substance (such as precursors or recipe substances for ‘cooking’ meth). In addition, at any waveband, the strength of the illumination produced by an LED can be easily controlled. This two-dimensional advanced embodiment of the technology is unique to this technology, and can support rapid identification of substances of interest even in the presence of complex interferent and clutter backgrounds. In such an advanced embodiment, control of such advanced scan and detection modes, to include on-the-spot, effectively real-time analysis and diagnosis of the responses can be readily accomplished through the microchip incorporated into the control module of the device.
The device and method for use described herein are useful to numerous industries and agencies including, but not limited to, Law Enforcement (State/County/City Police), Drug Enforcement Agency, Emergency Responders (Fire, Medical, Hazmat, etc.), Healthcare (Hospitals, Medical Treatment Facilities, Doctor's Offices), Department of Transportation, Transportation Safety Agency, Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms, School Systems security (Public, Private, Universities), Environmental Protection Agency, Hazardous cleanup companies, Hotel Security, Sports Arena Security, Nightclub Security, Prison Administrators (Federal, State, City, County, Private), Veterans Association (and other halfway house authorities), Industrial facilities (Paper mills, cement companies), Trucking companies, Insurance agencies, Vehicle and Cargo Inspection, and the like. The embodiments described herein are useful to the agriculture industries for the detection of plant and forest diseases. And the invention may be useful for the following applications: screening suspects who have been apprehended including searching their person, their vehicle, and packages or other belongings in their possession; searching a room, building, car, airplane, boat, or other structure or vehicle that is suspected of storing drugs or explosives; screening prisoners in or visitors to a correctional facility as they pass through designated checkpoints; screening large numbers of people from the general public, for example, at a customs checkpoint, an airport, or at a border crossing; screening hand-carried items at busy personnel checkpoints, for example, hand-carried luggage in an airport; screening large numbers of vehicles at checkpoints such as border crossings and entrances to secure government or private facilities; screening letters, packages, and other items that pass through a mailroom, e.g., as part of a Postal services package interdiction program; screening surfaces to ensure hazardous cleanup was affective. Parents of children may use the device for monitoring possible substance related activities of the children. Additionally, the invention may be useful for detecting counterfeit products where known products are seeded with a known fluorescent marker that could be detected for validity of product, with counterfeit products detectable through absence of marker.
Claims
1. A device for determining the presence or absence of at least one substance comprising:
- an illumination component configured to illuminate a target with a first waveband; and
- a detection component including at least one light emitting diode configured to detect a second waveband emitted by the target in response to the first waveband if the target contains a threshold amount of the at least one substance,
- wherein, the illumination component and the detection component are included in a head unit module;
- the head unit module including multiple subsets of illumination and detection components, wherein each of the multiple subsets is configured to illuminate and detect for the presence or absence of a different substance.
2. The device of claim 1, further comprising:
- a controller module configured to control the illumination component and detection component.
3. The device of claim 2, further comprising:
- a power module configured to provide power to the device.
4. The device of claim 3, further comprising:
- a data module configured to record data indicative of the presence or absence of the substance.
5. The device of claim 1, the illumination component including at least one forward bias light emitting diode.
6. The device of claim 5, the detection component including at least one reverse-biased light emitting diode.
7. The device of claim 6, wherein the ratio of forward bias light emitting diodes (M) and reverse bias light emitting diodes (N) is M:N.
8. The device of claim 7, wherein the ratio M:N is 1:3.
9. The device according to claim 8, the at least one substance is methamphetamine.
10. The device of claim 1, the controller module including a subset selection component configured to facilitate the selection of a particular subset of illumination and detection components depending on a substance of interest.
11. The device according to claim 1, the head unit module being rotatable such that a user selects a subset of illumination and detection components by rotating the single head unit and aligning a desired subset of illumination and detection components with an alignment indicator.
12. The device according to claim 1, the first waveband is approximately centered at 261 nm and the second waveband is in the span of approximately 266 nm to 335 nm.
13. The device according to claim 12, the second waveband is centered at approximately 284 nm.
14. The device according to claim 12, the at least one substance is methamphetamine.
15. The device according to claim 1, including a calibration module containing light emitting diodes tuned to simulate a fluorescence response of the at least one substance.
16. The device according to claim 1, wherein the threshold amount is on the order of micrograms.
17. The device according to claim 1, wherein the device is handheld.
18. A device for determining the presence or absence of at least one substance comprising:
- an illumination component configured to illuminate a target with a first waveband; and
- a detection component including at least one light emitting diode configured to detect a second waveband emitted by the target in response to the first waveband if the target contains a threshold amount of the at least one substance,
- wherein, the illumination component and the detection component are included in a head unit module; the head unit module is removable from the device and replaceable with one of multiple secondary head unit modules, each secondary head unit module being configured to determine the presence or absence of a different substance of interest.
19. The device of claim 18, further comprising:
- a controller module configured to control the illumination component and detection component.
20. The device of claim 19, further comprising:
- a power module configured to provide power to the device.
21. The device of claim 20, further comprising:
- a data module configured to record data indicative of the presence or absence of the substance.
22. The device of claim 18, the illumination component including at least one forward bias light emitting diode.
23. The device of claim 22, the detection component including at least one reverse-biased light emitting diode.
24. The device of claim 23, wherein the ratio of forward bias light emitting diodes (M) and reverse bias light emitting diodes (N) is M:N.
25. The device of claim 24, wherein the ratio M:N is 1:3.
26. The device according to claim 25, the at least one substance is methamphetamine.
27. The device according to claim 18, the first waveband is approximately centered at 261 nm and the second waveband is in the span of approximately 266 nm to 335 nm.
28. The device according to claim 27, the second waveband is centered at approximately 284 nm.
29. The device according to claim 27, the at least one substance is methamphetamine.
30. The device according to claim 18, including a calibration module containing light emitting diodes tuned to simulate a fluorescence response of the at least one substance.
31. The device according to claim 18, wherein the threshold amount is on the order of micrograms.
32. The device according to claim 18, wherein the device is handheld.
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Type: Grant
Filed: Jul 24, 2006
Date of Patent: Jun 3, 2008
Assignee: Science Applications International Corporation (San Diego, CA)
Inventors: Peter George Varmette (Huntsville, AL), Michael James Lowe (Scottsboro, AL), Michael Francis Baran (Madison, AL)
Primary Examiner: David P. Porta
Assistant Examiner: Mark R Gaworecki
Attorney: King & Spalding LLP
Application Number: 11/491,093
International Classification: G01N 21/64 (20060101);